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Thursday, October 11, 2018

Everything You Need to Know About Ripple

Bitcoin might command most of the public’s mindshare on cryptocurrency, but Ripple is a company you definitely don’t want to overlook. Founded in 2012, Ripple sells a currency settlement and exchange platform and issues the third largest cryptocurrency (based on market capitalization) in the world.

But its value proposition doesn’t stem from being a Bitcoin copycat. It actually stems from being one of the most unique cryptocurrencies on the market.

To accomplish this goal, Ripple decided to design their token, XRP, as a currency transfer tool instead of as a medium of exchange, underpin it with a unique blockchain that can validate its transactions 215 times faster than Bitcoin can, and eliminate mining as the only way to acquire it.

Ripple as a Currency Transfer Tool

Ripple’s cryptocurrency, XRP, is popular amongst huge financial institutions, like Santander and American Express, because the token can significantly expedite these financial institution’s cross-border payment transfers.

This is refreshing and a lot more convenient for financial institutions who usually have to deal with the typical yet complex global payment system, SWIFT, which makes every bank open a separate account for every country they work in.

While XRP can process 1,500 transactions per second, Bitcoin can only process seven transactions per second. And coupled with each cryptocurrency’s volatile prices, there’s more of a risk that financial institutions will receive a lower amount of tokens than initially expected once their transaction finalizes if they transact with Bitcoin instead of XRP.

Ripple's Unique Blockchain Improves Current Global Payments System and Requires No Mining

The XRP transfer process is swift because the cryptocurrency isn’t nearly as decentralized as the other major currencies like Bitcoin. Bitcoin’s main purpose is to introduce a new global payment system that can connect consumers directly with suppliers, removing the need for a financial middleman like a bank.

Ripple, on the other hand, wants to improve the existing global payment system. So the currency’s blockchain, RippleNet, requires only 25 independent nodes, managed by various financial institutions, tech companies, and Ripple itself, to all agree on the true state of XRP's public ledger and, in turn, validate its transactions.

Instead of millions of global miners validating its transactions, XRP only needs 25 nodes to do it. This makes XRP much faster at verifying and processing transactions than Bitcoin.

In conjunction with RippleNet’s validation process, Ripple also owns and issues the entire supply of XRP, which means you don't have to spend massive amounts of time and electricity to mine XRP like you do to get bitcoins. You can only buy the token on cryptocurrency exchanges.

A Token With a Different Mission

Ripple might be listed under the same crypto umbrella as Bitcoin, but the two cryptocurrencies have entirely different missions. Instead of gutting the current global payment system and replacing it with its own, Ripple wants to make the global payment system better for years to come.